Sony, the company who created Audio CDs which installed a rootkit on Windows computer to try to stop people copying music has pirated KDE artwork. The preferences-system.png icon from Oxygen is on their Choose your Vaio webpages (next to configure) but impressively is also on the UEFI firmware should you boot up into Assist mode. Nowhere on their website terms of use does it list the LGPL 3 licence it may be copied under (It does say "Any unauthorised use or copying of site content, or use of site content which breaches these Terms (or their spirit) may violate trade mark, copyright and other proprietary rights, and have civil and criminal consequences" although it also says "You must seek and obtain the written consent the operator of this site before creating any link to this site" so I don't give that page any legal credit.) Should KDE e.V. and Nuno's Oxygen friends start a new business model by sueing them for everything they're worth?

Oxygen icon on left. "Choose your Vaio" web page fragment on right.

Personally, I think they should give credit to them. It shouldn't come down to a lawsuit--they'd just be burnning money they can use to write more OSS. What do you guys think?

TurboShrimp, this is not about giving credit. This is about simply not following the terms of a license.
Here is a abridgement to help you understant the license in question: http://www.tldrlegal.com/l/LGPL3

This seems to be more about a mistake from a developer than Sony actively abusing their power. Clearly Sony has the capacity to make up a "icon" - to say otherwise is just silly. Not saying that Sony is or is not an "Evil" corporation but in this manner I am sure if any financial penalty is required by KDE, the matter will be properly handled.

Images would set an interesting legal precedent... how does one provide the source code for an image?